# Each room's schedule is copied to its room schedule [[FUDCon organization process#Signage|sign]]

# Each room's schedule is copied to its room schedule [[FUDCon organization process#Signage|sign]]

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== Preparing for a session ==

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This section describes what an individual session in a Barcamp might look like, and links to resources with tips on how to prepare a session. This is reference material that Barcamp organizers can point attendees to in order to get them in the proper frame of mind.

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'''FIXME -- refer to Fedora-specific "how to do a barcamp session" materials if available'''

The sessions are run by the person presenting. [[FUDCon Live]] AV people can assist with room wrangling, including assisting with projector and sound setup, on-time session startup, and on-time session wrap-up.

The sessions are run by the person presenting. [[FUDCon Live]] AV people can assist with room wrangling, including assisting with projector and sound setup, on-time session startup, and on-time session wrap-up.

Revision as of 18:05, 31 January 2010

The barcamp component of a FUDCon consists of one or more days of sessions that are organized at the start of the barcamp.

What a barcamp looks like

For an overview of what a FUDCon Barcamp looks like, see photo slide presentation of what a (non-FUDCon) Barcamp looks like and how it works:

The FUDCon:Toronto 2009 BarCamp Schedule is a good example of what a FUDCon Barcamp schedule ends up looking like once the sessions are set at the start of the first Barcamp morning. The schedule also links to transcripts of each session that volunteers did as part of FUDCon Live.

Subsequent sections of this page will describe the process that goes into making this kind of experience happen.

Pitches

At the start of a barcamp (and, typically, in previews on the wiki page of the FUDCon event), people who would like to present a barcamp session pitch their talk idea. This is usually done by writing the name of the talk on a piece of paper and lining up with other presenters to give a 15-second description of the proposed talk. The papers are then taped to proposed positions in the barcamp grid.

User track

The user track is a group of sessions that are arranged in advance and intended to be attractive to users and to new community members.

Grid

sheets of paper have been taped to the top of columns indicating session rooms and seating capacities

more sheets have been taped down the side of rows indicating session time slots

The sessions papers from the pitches are then taped to the "cells" in the grid.

Voting

Attendees take about 20-40 minutes (depending on the size of the group) to mark up the session sheets indicating which sessions they would most like to attend.

Finalizing the schedule

Based on the votes, the schedule grid is finalized. Sessions on similar topics with a small number of ticks are combined; sessions with no or few ticks are eliminated; and topics are arranged according to room capacity and to avoid running similar sessions (which would attract the same attendees) at the same time.

Communicating the schedule

Preparing for a session

This section describes what an individual session in a Barcamp might look like, and links to resources with tips on how to prepare a session. This is reference material that Barcamp organizers can point attendees to in order to get them in the proper frame of mind.

FIXME -- refer to Fedora-specific "how to do a barcamp session" materials if available

Running the sessions

The sessions are run by the person presenting. FUDCon Live AV people can assist with room wrangling, including assisting with projector and sound setup, on-time session startup, and on-time session wrap-up.